Kevin:
Actually, I attended more classical and koiné Greek and
Latin classes than Hebrew. The profs for both languages
taught that in the earliest surviving Latin through the
Republic that the alphabet notated only the phonemes in
Latin, and in Greek the only exception was the "h" in front
of some words starting with vowels. The change for Latin
came later, particularly during the medieval period, and I
wasn't taught about later changes in Greek.
(For all we know, could not that "h" in font of some Greek
words starting with vowels have been something that was
added later, that it was not original?)
Thus, according to how I was taught both languages, they
do support my thesis that Hebrew probably had only 22
recognized phonemes when the alphabet was
developed.
Karl W. Randolph.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Kevin Riley" <klriley at alphalink.com.au>
> ...
>> ****************
> And neither came up with an alphabet that notated only the phonemes of the
> respective langauges - no more and no less. Which undermines your theory of
> Hebrew only having 22 consonants symbols because it only had 22 phonemes.
>> *****************
>> ...
>> Kevin Riley
--
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